From WindowBlinds' latest Change Log in FileHippo...
" - Windows 10 Compatibility! "
When were they confronted with that barrier, last September? Imagine if they told their customers, "Hey, in 6 months we'll fix it!" Yeah.
From WindowBlinds' latest Change Log in FileHippo...
" - Windows 10 Compatibility! "
When were they confronted with that barrier, last September? Imagine if they told their customers, "Hey, in 6 months we'll fix it!" Yeah.
Not the only software to recently add Win10 support. Some development teams can be small, or be left at the back of the line to get development kits, etc.
What is windowblinds sounds odd
I think it's very similar to Windows Fences if you have heard of that one.
I think you can use either to 'tidy up' your desktop into groups, or something like that.
Never found the need, that the normal folders couldn't do for you.
But I'm sure I will be enlightened as to what other advantages Blinds or Fences may give you.
Let us know @Corona
Can't I do that already with win10 multidesktop...or better, folders on the desktop on windows 3.x and higher...sigh
I was hoping it was a better windows for blind people than screen reader...maybe something that gave you daredevil powers...ok back to watching daredevil
WindowBlinds is a software utility that allows you to completely change the look and feel of Microsoft Windows. It works by applying new visual styles, also called skins, across the entire user interface (i.e. start menu, window frames, title bars, menus, buttons, taskbar, scroll bars, ...) of the operating system. As a result, you gain complete control over the way Windows looks.
http://www.stardock.com/products/windowblinds/help/welcome.htm
I've never seen the need for it personally but others seem to like it.
WindowBlinds is a software utility that allows you to completely change the look and feel of Microsoft Windows. It works by applying new visual styles, also called skins, across the entire user interface (i.e. start menu, window frames, title bars, menus, buttons, taskbar, scroll bars, ...) of the operating system. As a result, you gain complete control over the way Windows looks.
http://www.stardock.com/products/windowblinds/help/welcome.htm
I've never seen the need for it personally but others seem to like it.
Sounds RAM/CPU intensive
I've never seen the need for it personally but others seem to like it.
I liked it on Win98 when it would give the "theme" if how Win98 looked could even be called a theme a slightly nicer look. Although some of what it did way back then could be done manually, and without some program running at startup.
I had it over 12 years ago and got tired of it after a year.